Physical preparation and return to sport of the football player with a tibia-fibula fracture: applying the 'control-chaos continuum'.
Matt TabernerNicol van DykTom AllenChris RichterCarl HowarthSimon ScottDaniel Dylan CohenPublished in: BMJ open sport & exercise medicine (2019)
Contact in elite football can result in severe injury such as traumatic fracture. Limited information exists regarding the rehabilitation and return to sport (RTS) of these injuries especially in elite football. We outline the RTS of an elite English Premier League footballer following a tibia-fibula fracture including gym-based physical preparation and the use of 'control-chaos continuum' as a framework for on-pitch sport-specific conditioning, development of technical skills while returning the player to pre-injury chronic running loads considering the qualitative nature of movement in competition. Strength and power diagnostics were used to back up clinical reasoning and decision-making throughout rehabilitation and the RTS process. The player returned to full team training after 7.5 months, completed 90 min match-play after 9 months and remains injury-free 11 months post-RTS.
Keyphrases
- high school
- body composition
- decision making
- physical activity
- mental health
- spinal cord injury
- anterior cruciate ligament
- palliative care
- molecularly imprinted
- systematic review
- healthcare
- quality improvement
- drug induced
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- health information
- mass spectrometry
- image quality
- solid phase extraction